Intravolume diffractive optical elements

6884961
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Inventors

Dmitriev, Vladamir
Guletsky, Nikolay
Oshemkov, Sergey

Application #

362800

Filed

Aug-23-2001

Published

Apr-26-2005

Current US Class

219/121.69

International Classes

B23K 026//00

Field of Search

219/1216 219/121.68 219/121.69 219/121.76 219/121.77 219/121.85

Assignee

UC Laser Ltd. (Carmiel, IL)

Examiners

Heinrich; Samuel M.

Attorney, Agent or Firm

Sheppard, Mullin, Richter & Hampton LLP

US Patent References

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Referenced by:

View Backward References

Other References

Denisyuk, "OpticalProperties of an Object as Mirrored in the Wave Field of its Scattered Radiation," published in Optics and Spectroscopy, vol. 15, pp. 522-532 Van Heerden, "Theory of Optical Information Storage in Solids," published in Applied Optics, vol. 2, p. 764, 1963. B.R. Brown, et al., "Complex Spatial Filtering with Binary Masks," published in Applied Optics, Vo. 5, p. 967, 1966. B.R. Brown, et al., "Computer-Generated Binary Holograms," IBM J. Res. Develop., pp. 160-168, Mar. 1969. W.T. Cathey, "The Effect of Finite Sampling in Holography," pp. 317-323, 1968. J.W. Goodman et al., "Some Effects of Fourier Domain Phase Quantization," published in IBM Journal of Research and Development, vol. 14, p. 478, 1970. W.H. Lee, "Binary Synthetic Holograms," Applied Optics, vol. 13, No. 7, pp. 1677-1682, Jul. 1974. P.S. Naidu, "Quantization Noise in Binary Holograms," Optics Communications, vol. 15, No. 3, pp. 361-365, Nov. 1975. J.P. Allebach, et al., "Aliasing Error in Digital Holography," Applied Optics, vol. 15, No. 9, pp. 2183-2188, Sep. 1976. J.N. Mait, "Review of Multi-Phase Fourier Grating Design for Array Generation," published in SPIE vol. 1211, p. 67, 1990. L.D. Faddeev, et al., "Stationary Approach to Scattering Theory," Chapter 2, published by Kluver Dordrech, 1993. Kazanskly, et al., "Computer-Aided Design of Diffractive Optical Elements," Optical Engineering, Soc. of Optical Instrumentation Engineers, vol. 44, No. 10, pp. 3156-3166, Oct. 1994. V.A. Soifer, et al., "Multifocal Diffractive Elements," published in Optical Engineering, vol. 33, p. 3610, Nov. 1994. D. Brown, et al., "Multi-Element Diffractive Optical Designs Using Evolutionary Programming," published in SPIE vol. 2404, p. 17,1995.

Citation

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Abstract
A method of producing in a solid transparent material, a diffractive optical element for the transformation of an incident wave in a predefined manner, by developing a mathematical model of the element in terms of the required transformation, then using that model for determining a set of points which form the desired diffractie optical element, and then focusing a pulsed laser beam sequentially onto the points in the set, such that it causes optical breakdown damage at those points. Numerical solutions for determining the positions of the set of points from the mathematical model are presented. The production of number of elements for specific applications is described. Complete laser systems capable of monitoring the production of the points in real time according to the results obtained by diffraction of the incident wave by the element under production.
 
Claims
1. A method of producing in a solid transparent material, a diffractive optical element for the predefined transformation of an incident wave, comprising the steps of:

developing a mathematical model of said diffractive optical element in terms of said transformation;

using said mathematical model for determining a set of points which form said diffractive optical element; and

focusing at least one pulsed laser beam onto said points, such that it causes optical breakdown damage at said points.

2. The method of claim 1 and wherein said mathematical model reviews the discrete structure of said set of points and takes into account the amplitude and phase properties of their scattering diagram.



Description
FIELD OF THE INVENTION

The present invention relates to the field of intravolume diffractive optical elements, especially those produced in transparent materials by means of digital laser engraving at very high energy densities.

BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION

Diffractive optical elements (DOE's) are well known and fulfill important roles in industrial and military applications, in imaging, in medicine, in the storage, processing and transmission of information, and elsewhere. Digital DOE's, have been described by B. R. Brown and A. W. Lohmann in the article "Complex Spatial Filtering with Binary Masks", published in Applied Optics, Vol. 5, p. 967ff, (1966). Such digital DOE's have generally been produced by means of mechanical micro-engraving, electron beam, ion beam or chemical etching, electron lithography or photolithography, or by other suitable techniques.

The mathematical functionality of a DOE can be expressed in terms of the field R({right arrow over (r)}) produced after imaging by the DOE of an incident light field S({right arrow over (u)}). This image field is given by equation 1: ##EQU1##
where S({right arrow over (u)}) is the incident light field at the surface, s, of the DOE,
    • T({right arrow over (u)}) is the complex transmission coefficient of the DOE,
    • d({right arrow over (r)}, {right arrow over (i)}) is the optical path from point {right arrow over (r)} to {right arrow over (u)} in the imaging space, and ##EQU2##
    • is the integral over the surface, s, of the DOE.
  •  
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